Most of your Stranger Thingsseason two binge-watch concerns have probably centered on having adequate sustenance ready for the October 27 premiere date, but the show’s creators want you to make sure your TV is set up to properly render the nostalgia-glazed images. Matt and Ross Duffer tell Vulture, among many other things about the show, that it’s best experienced on the kind of set you would have watched an edited-for-TV version of E.T. or Close Encounters Of The Third Kind or some other Steven Spielberg movie. According to the Duffer brothers, your beautiful 4K flatscreen might make something like Doctor Strange look great, but it’s totally killing their vibe.

“Us and everyone in Hollywood puts so much time and effort and money into getting things to look just right,” Matt Duffer huffs, “and when you see it in someone’s home, it looks like it was shot on an iPhone.” His brother Ross says they found it “shocking” that the TVs at Comic-Con were also set to transmit images improperly, because “‘‘Didn’t a bunch of nerds put this together? What is wrong with them?’”

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To avoid having Stranger Things season two look like “garbage” on your TV next month, Matt says “the key thing is to turn off anything that says ‘motion.’ ‘TruMotion.’ ‘Smooth motion.’” The producing brothers didn’t touch on the display for internet-connected devices like smartphones and laptops, presumably because they could only handle one disappointment at a time.